coma24
Line Up and Wait
I have some long range flights coming up. Having learned the basics of portable oxygen systems, I'm curious what type of performance to expect if I take my airplane up to 17,000ft.
I routinely fly it at 11k, and occasionally at 12k. The difference in fuel burn between flying at 8k and 12k is pretty significant. I'm wondering if I should expect a linear reduction in fuel burn up at 17k?
The aircraft is a Lancair 360. Based on the expected drop in manifold pressure, I'm pretty sure I'll be able to get it up to that altitude to take advantage of the reduced fuel burn and massive winter tailwinds (it'll be a coast to coast flight, so I'm interested in maximizing range). My question is what fuel burn to expect up at that altitude, wide open, lean of peak. That said, at such a low power setting, I may well shoot for best power instead of LOP as the drop in IAS associated with LOP ops might be significant in terms of TAS.
I routinely fly it at 11k, and occasionally at 12k. The difference in fuel burn between flying at 8k and 12k is pretty significant. I'm wondering if I should expect a linear reduction in fuel burn up at 17k?
The aircraft is a Lancair 360. Based on the expected drop in manifold pressure, I'm pretty sure I'll be able to get it up to that altitude to take advantage of the reduced fuel burn and massive winter tailwinds (it'll be a coast to coast flight, so I'm interested in maximizing range). My question is what fuel burn to expect up at that altitude, wide open, lean of peak. That said, at such a low power setting, I may well shoot for best power instead of LOP as the drop in IAS associated with LOP ops might be significant in terms of TAS.